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Trademark Registration Indonesia: The Complete Guide for Foreign Brands

June 26, 2026

11 minutes read

Trademark Registration Indonesia Complete Guide for Foreign BrandsTrademark Registration Indonesia Complete Guide for Foreign Brands

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Trademark registration Indonesia is not just a legal formality. It is the foundation of brand protection in one of Southeast Asia’s most dynamic and competitive markets, home to over 270 million consumers and a rapidly expanding digital economy.

Whether a business is entering Indonesia for the first time or scaling existing operations, failing to register a trademark early can cost far more than the registration itself. Squatters, counterfeiters, and opportunistic filers are active. The good news? The system has become significantly more efficient and achievable to navigate with the right partner.

Business Hub Asia (BHA) has guided foreign companies through this process across dozens of industries. This guide draws on that hands-on experience to give you a clear, current, and actionable overview of everything you need to know about trademark registration in Indonesia.

Why Foreign Companies Must Register Trademarks Before Entering Indonesia

Indonesia follows a strict first-to-file system. Whoever files for a trademark first in Indonesia holds the rights within the country. A brand that has operated globally for decades can lose its name in Indonesia to a local filer overnight.

For companies looking to register a trademark in Indonesia as a foreign company, this risk is very real. According to the 2025 DGIP IP Outlook Report, foreign trademark applications rose from 31,165 in 2023 to 35,670 in 2024, reflecting growing international awareness of exactly this vulnerability. Indonesia brand protection for foreign investors must begin before the first product ships or the first office opens.

Key Risks of Delayed Registration

  • Brand squatters can register your mark and demand compensation to transfer it back
  • Customs authorities cannot seize infringing goods without a registered trademark on file
  • Distributors and partners lose confidence when a brand has no registered IP in-country
  • Rebranding after a failed opposition or cancellation is costly, disruptive, and avoidable

BHA Approach: BHA’s trademark team initiates availability searches and parallel market entry planning simultaneously, so IP protection and business registration move forward together rather than in sequence.

Trademark Registration and PT PMA: Building Complete Market Entry Protection

Many foreign companies make the mistake of treating trademark registration as a standalone task, separate from their broader Indonesia market entry strategy. BHA recommends a different approach: combining trademark filing with the establishment of a PT PMA (Perseroan Terbatas Penanaman Modal Asing) as part of a unified market entry package.

What Is PT PMA and Why Does It Matter for Brand Owners?

PT PMA is a foreign investment company wholly or partially owned by foreign shareholders, capable of operating across a wide range of sectors in Indonesia. Under Indonesia’s current investment framework, many business activities can be conducted through a PT PMA structure, particularly in distribution, retail, food and beverage, professional services, and e-commerce.

For trademark owners specifically, the PT PMA structure provides a critical commercial advantage: it enables the registered entity to actively enforce trademark rights, enter commercial contracts, engage distributors, and operate e-commerce channels under a legally recognized legal entity. A trademark registration without a functioning entity limits how far that protection can actually be exercised.

The BHA Market Entry Package: Trademark + PT PMA

BHA structures the following as an integrated engagement for foreign brands entering Indonesia:

  • PDKI trademark search and class strategy, identifying the right classes before any company formation begins
  • PT PMA incorporation, establishing the legal entity that will operate the brand in-country
  • Trademark filing in the company name or parent brand name, depending on commercial structure
  • DGIP e-filing, formality review, and opposition monitoring, handled end-to-end by BHA
  • Ongoing trademark management including renewals, infringement monitoring, and class expansion as the business grows

BHA Pro Tip: Structuring your trademark filing and PT PMA incorporation together can reduce your total market entry timeline by weeks. BHA’s team coordinates both processes in parallel, eliminating the common lag between legal entity establishment and IP protection filing.

For businesses operating in sectors where foreign ownership restrictions apply, the PT PMA structure supported with proper trademark ownership documentation also provides a cleaner basis for future investment agreements, licensing arrangements, and exit transactions.

BHA’s market entry advisory team has established PT PMA entities across sectors including F&B, retail, technology, logistics, and professional services. We advise on the right structure before filing begins, not after.

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What Can and Cannot Be Registered as a Trademark Under Law No. 20/2016

The primary legislation governing trademark registration in Indonesia is Law No. 20 of 2016 on Marks and Geographical Indications, further amended by Law No. 6 of 2023 on Job Creation. The law defines clearly what qualifies as a protectable mark and what is excluded.

Registrable marks include words, names, letters, numbers, colors, shapes, sounds, holograms, and combinations thereof, provided they are distinctive. Non-traditional marks such as three-dimensional marks and sound marks are formally recognized under the 2016 law.

Marks That Cannot Be Registered (Article 20, Law No. 20/2016)

  • Marks contrary to state ideology, morality, religion, or public order
  • Generic terms or descriptions for the goods or services applied for
  • Marks that are deceptive or misleading about origin, quality, or type
  • National symbols, flags, or emblems of a country or international organization
  • Names or abbreviations of persons or institutions, without their consent
  • Marks identical or confusingly similar to an already registered or well-known trademark in the territory of the Republic of Indonesia

BHA Pro Tip: Descriptive or generic words carry the highest rejection risk due to their frequent similarity with already registered or well-known trademarks. Distinctive, invented marks consistently perform better in DGIP trademark Indonesia examination.

Trademark Class in Indonesia: The Nice Classification System

One of the most important decisions in any trademark registration in Indonesia is selecting the correct class or classes. Indonesia uses the Nice Classification (NCL) system to categorize goods and services. There are 45 classes in total: Classes 1 to 34 cover goods, Classes 35 to 45 cover services. As of 2026, Indonesia has formally adopted the 13th Edition of the Nice Classification.

Each application is filed per class. A business selling clothing (Class 25) and operating an online retail store (Class 35) must file in both classes separately. Filing in the wrong trademark class in Indonesia, or missing a relevant class, can leave a brand legally exposed in that area.

Most Commonly Filed Trademark Classes in Indonesia

  • Class 25 Clothing, footwear, and headgear
  • Class 35 Advertising, business management, and retail services
  • Class 42 Scientific and technology services, software, and IT
  • Class 43 Food and beverage services (restaurants, cafes)
  • Class 09 Electronic devices, computers, and downloadable software
  • Class 30 Coffee, tea, confectionery, and bakery products

BHA Pro Tip: Businesses planning product or service expansion should file across multiple classes from the start. BHA conducts forward-looking class strategy sessions that map current and planned offerings against the Nice Classification, reducing the risk of gaps that competitors can exploit.

How to Conduct a Trademark Search in Indonesia Using the PDKI and WIPO

Before any trademark application is filed, a comprehensive trademark search Indonesia PDKI check is essential. The official resource is the PDKI (Pangkalan Data Kekayaan Intelektual), the national IP database operated by the DGIP, accessible at pdki-indonesia.dgip.go.id. International applicants should also cross-reference with the WIPO Global Brand Database for any Madrid Protocol designations covering Indonesia.

What a Good Trademark Search Must Cover

  • Identical marks in the same class
  • Phonetically or visually similar marks in the same class
  • Well-known marks in unrelated classes (Indonesia protects these under Article 21)
  • Pending applications, not just registered marks
  • Madrid Protocol designations covering Indonesia via WIPO

BHA conducts multi-layer PDKI and WIPO searches as the first step of every trademark engagement. Our team’s experience with Indonesian examiner practice means we can assess not just whether a mark exists, but how similar marks have been treated in prior examination decisions, a level of insight that a basic database search alone cannot provide.

Step-by-Step DGIP Trademark Indonesia Registration Process

The DGIP (Directorate General of Intellectual Property) oversees all trademark filings in Indonesia. The process is conducted online through the official e-filing portal at merek.dgip.go.id. Understanding how DGIP trademark Indonesia registration works is essential for any brand entering the market.

1. Trademark Search Conduct a comprehensive PDKI and WIPO search to confirm availability in the target class(es).

2. Prepare Application Documents Gather the mark specimen, applicant details, class description, and Power of Attorney if using a local representative.

3. File via the DGIP E-Filing System Submit the application online and receive a billing code for official fee payment.

4. Pay the Official State Fee Payment must be made within 14 days of the billing code. Failure to pay results in automatic rejection.

5. Formality Examination The DGIP reviews the application for completeness. Incomplete documents trigger a 30-day correction window.

6. Publication in the Official Trademark Gazette Approved applications are published for a 2-month opposition period.

7. Substantive Examination DGIP examiners assess the mark against Articles 20, 21, and 22 of the Trademark Law.

8. Certificate Issuance Upon approval, the trademark is recorded in the National Trademark Register. Protection is valid for 10 years from the original filing date.

Indonesia Trademark Registration Cost: Documents and Fees

A common question from foreign brands is about the Indonesia trademark registration cost. The total cost typically includes official DGIP state fees per class filed, plus professional fees for a registered Indonesian IP consultant or attorney, who is legally required for all overseas applicants.

Documents Required for Foreign Applicants

To register a trademark in Indonesia as a foreign company, the following documents are required:

  • Power of Attorney (POA) Must be executed by the authorized signatory of the foreign company. Notarization requirements depend on the applicant’s home country.
  • Mark Specimen A clear reproduction of the trademark in the format filed (word mark, logo, combination, etc.).
  • List of Goods/Services Clearly stated in accordance with the Nice Classification 13th Edition.
  • Applicant Details Full legal name and address of the trademark owner.
  • Priority Claim Documents (if applicable) If claiming priority under the Paris Convention, a certified copy of the original foreign application must be submitted within 6 months.
  • Statement of Use (for renewal) A signed declaration confirming the mark has been in commercial use.

BHA Pro Tip: Prepare the Power of Attorney before beginning the e-filing process. Any delay in submitting the POA after the application is filed can trigger a formality deficiency. BHA prepares all POA documentation as part of the onboarding process so filings proceed without delay.

How Long Does Trademark Registration in Indonesia Take?

One of the most searched questions among brand owners is: how long does trademark registration in Indonesia take? One of the most significant recent developments in Indonesia’s IP landscape is the dramatic reduction in processing time. Historically, trademark registration in Indonesia took 12 to 24 months, or longer in complex cases. That has changed considerably.

In early 2025, the DGIP implemented sweeping reforms including optimized examination workflows, expanded human resources, and improved digital infrastructure. By mid-2025, the Minister of Law publicly confirmed a maximum six-month processing timeline for uncomplicated applications, a 40% reduction within a single year.

Typical Timeline Breakdown

StageTimeframe
Formality examination (completeness review)Weeks 1 to 2
Publication period in the Official Trademark Gazette (2 months)Weeks 3 to 10
Substantive examination by DGIP examinersWeeks 11 to 24
Certificate issuance and recording in the Trademark RegisterWeeks 24 to 26

Applications that attract oppositions, require substantive responses, or involve complex class disputes may take longer. Businesses should plan accordingly and never delay trademark registration in Indonesia while waiting for market entry preparation to be finalized.

BHA tracks every active application in its client portfolio and provides status updates at each stage of the DGIP process.

Handling Oppositions and Office Actions

During the two-month publication window, any third party with legal standing, typically the holder of an earlier Indonesian registration or application, may file an opposition. This is often the most critical stage of the entire process for foreign brands, as it is where conflicts surface.

Applicants who face an opposition have a defined window to submit a formal response or counter-statement. The DGIP examiner then reviews both the opposition and the rebuttal alongside the substantive examination. If the opposition is upheld, the examiner may refuse the application entirely.

Key Points When Dealing with Oppositions

  • Evidence of prior use, registration, or market reputation strengthens a rebuttal significantly
  • Missing the deadline to file a response typically results in automatic rejection
  • Office actions must be addressed promptly within the given timeframe
  • Once a conflicting mark is registered, the only remedy is cancellation through the Commercial Court, significantly more complex and costly
  • Brand owners should monitor the PDKI database regularly during and after the publication period

BHA has handled opposition proceedings across multiple trademark classes and industries. Our approach combines legal argumentation with documented commercial evidence of prior use and market reputation, the combination that Indonesian examiners find most persuasive.

Trademark Renewal Indonesia: Protecting Your Registration Long-Term

A registered trademark in Indonesia remains valid for 10 years from the original filing date. Trademark renewal in Indonesia must be filed within six months before the registration’s expiry date. There is also a grace period of up to six months after expiry, though late renewal attracts additional official fees.

Registered trademarks that are not used for three consecutive years are vulnerable to non-use cancellation under Article 74 of Law No. 20/2016. Any interested third party may file a cancellation action before the Commercial Court on these grounds. The burden of proof rests with the plaintiff, but the risk is real for dormant registrations.

Effective Indonesia brand protection for foreign investors requires ongoing attention, not just a one-time filing.

Long-Term Brand Protection Checklist

  • File for trademark renewal in Indonesia at least six months before expiry to avoid lapses
  • Maintain documented evidence of trademark use in Indonesia: invoices, product photos, advertising, packaging
  • Monitor the PDKI database quarterly for identical or confusingly similar new filings
  • Consider filing across additional classes if the business expands its product or service range
  • Address infringement early; cease-and-desist letters or oppositions are cheaper than litigation
  • Register trademark renewals in all classes filed, not just primary ones

BHA Pro Tip: BHA maintains a trademark renewal calendar for all active client registrations, with automated reminders at the 9-year and 9.5-year marks. Forgetting renewal is one of the most avoidable, yet most common, ways businesses lose valuable IP in Indonesia. BHA clients do not face this risk.

Ready to Protect Your Brand in Indonesia?

BHA manages the complete trademark registration in Indonesia process, from initial PDKI search and class strategy, through PT PMA incorporation, DGIP filing, opposition handling, and long-term renewal management.

We work closely with registered Indonesian IP consultants to ensure every filing is accurate, timely, and strategically sound.

Edy is COO of Business Hub Asia with 20+ years’ experience in legal, compliance, and foreign investment, leading operations and regulatory strategy across Indonesia and Southeast Asia.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can a foreign company register a trademark in Indonesia without a local agent?

No. To register a trademark in Indonesia, a foreign company is legally required to appoint a registered Indonesian IP consultant or attorney. This requirement has been reinforced under Minister of Law Regulation No. 5 of 2026. BHA works with a panel of registered IP consultants to handle all filings on behalf of overseas clients.

Should I register the trademark in my foreign company name or my PT PMA's name?

This depends on your commercial and legal structure. BHA advises on the optimal ownership arrangement during the market entry planning phase, before any filing is made. In general, registering in the PT PMA name can simplify enforcement and local commercial arrangements, while parent company registration offers stronger global ownership alignment. Both approaches are valid and each has tradeoffs BHA helps clients navigate.

How long does trademark registration in Indonesia take in 2026?

Following the DGIP’s 2025 reforms, straightforward applications are now processed within a maximum of six months. Applications involving oppositions, complex class disputes, or incomplete documentation may take longer. This is a significant improvement from the previous standard of 12 to 24 months.

What is the PDKI, and why is it important before filing?

The PDKI (Pangkalan Data Kekayaan Intelektual) is Indonesia’s official national IP database, maintained by the DGIP. A thorough trademark search in Indonesia using the PDKI before filing is the most important preventative step any applicant can take. BHA treats this as a mandatory first step. Skipping it is the most common reason applications are rejected or opposed.

How many trademark classes in Indonesia should a business file under?

Each trademark application covers one Nice Classification class. Businesses should file in all classes relevant to their current and planned products or services. Multi-class protection from the start is more cost-effective than adding classes later. BHA’s class strategy sessions identify the full scope upfront.

What happens if someone else has already registered a similar trademark in Indonesia?

If a conflicting mark is already registered, the available options are limited to a cancellation action before the Commercial Court, a complex and expensive route. If the conflicting application is still in the publication phase, an opposition is faster and far more affordable. BHA monitors PDKI regularly on behalf of clients to catch these situations early.

Can BHA handle both my PT PMA incorporation and my trademark registration in Indonesia?

Yes. This is one of BHA’s core integrated service offerings. We coordinate company formation and trademark filing in parallel, with a single point of contact managing both processes. This is the most efficient approach to Indonesia market entry for foreign brands.

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